Phillies' Ben Revere hits first major league homer after 1,565 plate appearances

It took Phillies OF Ben Revere four years, but he finally cracked the home run code. (Derik Hamilton/Icon SMI)

On Tuesday night, Ben Revere finally homered, ending a drought of epic proportions. The 26-year-old Phillies centerfielder had gone longer without connecting for his first major league shot than any player since the end of World War II.

Revere collected his first homer against Rockies lefty Boone Logan in the seventh inning. With a 1-1 count, Logan put a 91 mph fastball on the inside corner of the plate, and Revere didn't miss it. Here's a GIF of the long-awaited dinger.

Here you can hear that Phillies play-by-play announcer Tom McCarthy was well aware of the drive's significance: "In the air to right field. Could it be? Cuddyer going back — and the first career home run in the big leagues for Ben Revere is finally on the board!"

As with most occasions when Revere — who came in batting a thin .291/.304/.323 for a 75+ OPS this season — swings the bat, the solo homer didn't do a whole lot of damage. It cut the Phillies' deficit to 4-2; they would give back the run in the next half-inning and wind up losing 6-2. Coming in the 1,566th plate appearance of a major league career that stretches back to September 2010, it did remove him from the post-1900 Top 10 list of players with the most plate appearances without a homer. Here's where he stood when the day began:

Rk

Player

PA

Years

1

Jack McCarthy

2470

1901-1907

2

Tom Oliver

2073

1930-1933

3

Irv Hall

2052

1943-1946

4

Roxy Walters

1602

1915-1925

5

Ben Revere

1562

2010-2014

6

Don Sutton

1559

1966-1988

7

Waite Hoyt

1421

1918-1938

8

Tim Johnson

1408

1973-1979

9

Luis Gomez

1391

1974-1981

10

Joe Sugden

1381

1901-1912

Some asterisks are necessary in that McCarthy actually homered eight times in 1898 and 1899 before deciding that the longball didn't agree with him, and likewise for Sugden, who hit three in 1894 and 1895. Revere had just passed Sutton on the all-time list on Monday; of course, Sutton was a pitcher, and a Hall of Fame one at that, and the same is true of Hoyt. The rest don't have excuses that are nearly as good. Oliver was a centerfielder for the Red Sox in the high-offense 1930s, Hall a wartime utility-man for some terrible Philadelphia A's squads, Walters a catcher whose career straddled the end of the Deadball Era and the start of the live ball one. Johnson and Gomez were futility-men whose careers intersected with the 1978 and 1979 Blue Jays; the former later managed them in 1998, but met his demise for lying about having served in Vietnam.

Revere surpassed Johnson on April 2. As Cliff Corcoran noted at the time, he had yet to surpass the homerless droughts of a few post-1946 players who eventually did hit one, namely Alex Cole (1,508 PA from 1990 to 1994), Duane Kuiper (1,532 PA from 1974 to 1977), and Greg Gross (1,887 PA from 1973 to 1977). With his homer in the books, he can now take aim at the legendary Kuiper, who hit one in 3,754 plate appearances from 1974-1985 and is still dining out on the distinction when he's not calling games for the Giants. They threw a bobblehead night for him earlier this year to celebrate his moment of glory.

On a list of players with the most plate appearances and one homer, Revere needs another 527 plate appearances to crack the top 10, none of whom are pitchers: